I am a bit puzzled by a weird behavior of Vi. I very simply would like to add increased numbers in some files. Since I have many thousands entries per file and many files, I would like to macro it in vi.
To do this, I enter the first number ("0001") on the first line and then yank it, insert it at the right place one line below, increment it and return to starting position on the line.
And it works ... by batches of either 7 lines, 70 lines or 700 lines . Because after each number "7", the auto-increase jumps to the next X0, X00 or X000!?
Examples :
... 0006 0007 0010 0011 ...
... 0036 0037 0040 0041 ...
... 0076 0077 0100 0101 ...
... 0156 0157 0160 0161 ...
... 0776 07771000 1001 ..., etc
It doesn't make any sense and I really very much don't understand.... Does anybody know what's going on ?
All,
After a power loss I went to power on our sun fire v120 that is running solaris 10 and now it will not boot. I tried power cycling it from the lom and pulling the cord but nothing works. All it does is after a power cycle it will start to boot and then start to spit out a bunch of hex... (2 Replies)
I met a problem in using grep -P.
There is a text file, temp.txt, whose content is:
dddd
abc
I ran the command:
grep -P "\s*abc" temp.txt
The result I expected is:
abc
But, the actual result is:
dddd
abc
Could anyone tell me what is wrong?
Thanks. (2 Replies)
I use rsync to keep a directory in synchronization betwen a Linux box with the hostname brutal and a Mac running OS X 10.5 (Leopard) with the hostname cooper. When I run the following command on my Linux machine:
rsync -avz --delete myuserid@cooper:/Library/WebServer/Documents... (2 Replies)
ok, there's a script i'm working on written in shell programming. #!/bin/sh
this script is written to spit out the contents of certain variables inside of it so the output looks something like this:
server01=89 server02=69 server03=89 server04=76
now, when i run this script from the... (4 Replies)
Hi there,
I'm using putty to connect to several servers. On every remote machine, the home key takes me at the beginning of a command line. Exept on one machine where a press on the home key outputs the tilde sign (~). Is there any place where I can override this behavior, I really prefer my... (6 Replies)
Hi Experts
I am facing a weird issue while using print statement in awk. I have a text file with 3 fields shown below:
# cat f1
234,abc,1000
235,efg,2000
236,jih,3000
#
When I print the third column alone, I dont face any issue as shown below:
# awk '{print $3 }' FS=, f1
1000
2000... (5 Replies)
Hi I am getting absurd behavior of escape character in echos as followed:oinlcso003{arsadm} #: echo "\as shdd"
\as shdd
oinlcso003{arsadm} #: echo "Well, isn't that \"special\"?"
Well, isn't that "special"?
oinlcso003{arsadm} #: echo "Well, isn't that \special\?"
Well, isn't that \special\?... (3 Replies)
Why could whatprovides not lookup this info for over 10 minutes, but install could install that package in less than a minute?
$ yum whatprovides */lsb_release
Loaded plugins: langpacks, presto, refresh-packagekit, versionlock
^Cupdates/group 18% 3.1 kB/s | 360 kB 08:28 ETA ... (0 Replies)
Can someone please explain what's wrong with the command i use below?
tr -c '\11\12\40-\176' ' '< $TEMP_FILE > $TEMP_FILE2
The invalid character/s is replaced with two spaces, the string2 only have 1 space in it. Please help.
Sample output:
333243,333244c333243,333244
< ... (1 Reply)
This really puzzles me. The following code gives me the error 'expr: syntax error' when I try to do multi-line comment using here document
<<EOF
echo "Sum is: `expr $1 + $2`"
EOF
Even if I explicitly comment out the line containing the expr using "#", the error message would still exist... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: royalibrahim
3 Replies
LEARN ABOUT SUSE
set_color
set_color(1) fish set_color(1)NAME
set_color - set_color - set the terminal color
set_color - set the terminal color
Synopsis
set_color [-v --version] [-h --help] [-b --background COLOR] [COLOR]
Description
Change the foreground and/or background color of the terminal. COLOR is one of black, red, green, brown, yellow, blue, magenta, purple,
cyan, white and normal.
o -b, --background Set the background color
o -c, --print-colors Prints a list of all valid color names
o -h, --help Display help message and exit
o -o, --bold Set bold or extra bright mode
o -u, --underline Set underlined mode
o -v, --version Display version and exit
Calling set_color normal will set the terminal color to whatever is the default color of the terminal.
Some terminals use the --bold escape sequence to switch to a brighter color set. On such terminals, set_color white will result in a grey
font color, while set_color --bold white will result in a white font color.
Not all terminal emulators support all these features. This is not a bug in set_color but a missing feature in the terminal emulator.
set_color uses the terminfo database to look up how to change terminal colors on whatever terminal is in use. Some systems have old and
incomplete terminfo databases, and may lack color information for terminals that support it. Download and install the latest version of
ncurses and recompile fish against it in order to fix this issue.
Version 1.23.1 Sun Jan 8 2012 set_color(1)